Thought I understood this but not so sure now, so some advice please.
Most kits say keep at room temp for 3 days then move to a cooler place. I suppose the 3 days is to let the bottling sugar start a secondry ferment hence carbonating the brew. I think my real question is this is 3 days long enough or should it be more like a week and the cool conditioning after what about that I generally find my beer is fine to drink after about 4 weeks but would a bit longer improve it.
Thanks for any advice
Conditioning time
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- Piss Artist
- Posts: 146
- Joined: Wed Oct 07, 2009 12:04 am
- Location: Worthing, Sussex
Re: Conditioning time
a lot of people on here say 6 weeks, I leave mine about 4 weeks minimum & so far has tasted great 

keg 1 : (Drinking) : Amarillo extract brew
keg 2 : (Conditioning) : Summer Ale extract
keg 3 : (Conditioning) : Lightening extract Goldings only
keg 4 : (Conditioning) : Lightening etxract
FV1 : FV2 :
Bottled: Brewferm Diabolo, Brewferm frambois
next up: coppers stout:)
keg 2 : (Conditioning) : Summer Ale extract
keg 3 : (Conditioning) : Lightening extract Goldings only
keg 4 : (Conditioning) : Lightening etxract
FV1 : FV2 :
Bottled: Brewferm Diabolo, Brewferm frambois
next up: coppers stout:)
Re: Conditioning time
depends on the beer really. most one can kits will be fit to drink after four weeks, the two can kits are better left a little longer, though they all seem to continue to improve up to about eight weeks. best way to leave em alone seems to be to build up a good rolling stock.
as for secondary conditioning, if I'm bottling I give them a full week somewhere warm to make sure they're carbonated. kegging I usually stick a brewbelt on the barrel until it parps or gets a bit weeblish looking - I had to take it off my last Ditch's stout after a day as the keg was off its feet and the tap housing was bulging out a bit ominously already.
as for secondary conditioning, if I'm bottling I give them a full week somewhere warm to make sure they're carbonated. kegging I usually stick a brewbelt on the barrel until it parps or gets a bit weeblish looking - I had to take it off my last Ditch's stout after a day as the keg was off its feet and the tap housing was bulging out a bit ominously already.

Fermenting: nowt
Conditioning: Headcracker, Brewmaker Northumberland Brown, Brewmaker Export Bitter
Drinking: Coopers Euro Lager, Coopers Dark Ale, Hambleton Bard Amber Export, Coopers Aussie Pale Ale, Almondbury Old, Coopers Stout, Wherry w/Chinook
Planning: BOTW 80/-

Conditioning: Headcracker, Brewmaker Northumberland Brown, Brewmaker Export Bitter
Drinking: Coopers Euro Lager, Coopers Dark Ale, Hambleton Bard Amber Export, Coopers Aussie Pale Ale, Almondbury Old, Coopers Stout, Wherry w/Chinook
Planning: BOTW 80/-
